South Carolina in the Civil War: The Confederate Experience in Letters and Diaries

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J. Edward Lee, Ron Chepesiuk
McFarland, Nov 25, 2004 - History - 192 pages

Although modern authors continually produce important studies of the War Between the States, the firsthand accounts of those who were in the conflict remain the most valuable tools for understanding. This collection of letters and diaries provides glimpses into the lives of a diverse group of South Carolinians.

Among the seventeen accounts are the voices of women, including a Confederate spy; of officers like Captain Obidiah Hardin, who left his beloved Palmetto State to fight and die in Virginia before the war was even a year old; and of common men, like German immigrant Augustus Franks, whose love for his adopted state compelled him to staunchly defend the Confederacy. Collected from the archives of Winthrop University, these remarkable documents give voices and faces to the war as it affected South Carolina and her citizens.

 

Contents

Acknowledgments
1
For the Widow Hardin
19
Lieutenant Watsons Camp Reminiscences
76
Trapped on Union Soil
93
My Dear Elodie
106
Our Banner Is Waving
120
In the Midst of Life We Are in the Midst of War
133
The Lost Causes Last Rites
149
Index
183
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

J. Edward Lee is the coauthor of Nixon, Ford and the Abandonment of South Vietnam (2002) and teaches history at Winthrop University. He lives in York, South Carolina. Ron Chepesiuk is a professor and head of special collections at Winthrop University. He is also the author of Sixties Radicals, Then and Now (1995), Raising Hell (1997), Hard Target (1999) and The Scotch-Irish (2000). He lives in Rock Hill, South Carolina.

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